The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was born on September 9th, 1965, catapulted into being by then-President Lyndon B. Johnson.

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[[File:FairHousing.HUD .jpg|right]]The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was born on September 9th, 1965, catapulted into being by then-President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Since its inception, HUD has had an unparalleled impact in the United States on housing generally and affordable, fair housing specifically, community development, and homelessness.

Since its inception, HUD has had an unparalleled impact in the United States on housing generally and affordable, fair housing specifically, community development, and homelessness.

Revision as of 11:02, 18 September 2017

The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was born on September 9th, 1965, catapulted into being by then-President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Since its inception, HUD has had an unparalleled impact in the United States on housing generally and affordable, fair housing specifically, community development, and homelessness.

Johnson’s creation of HUD was part of his reaction to an increased focus in the country on civil rights, urban renewal, and poverty. He framed the creation of the federal Executive branch (cabinet-level) agency as a continuation of the push begun in the 1930s and 1940s under the New Deal around public housing, addressing sub-standard housing and implementing large-scale urban renewal.

HUD was preceded by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) signed into being by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1934, as part of his “New Deal”, as well as the Truman Administration’s Housing and Home Financing Agency.

In the 1930s and 1940s, the United States government had taken a direct role in creating and managing affordable housing. In conjunction with HUD and Congressional legislators, in 1968, Johnson set HUD on a path of overseeing and regulating affordable housing largely created by and managed by the private sector - a shift that has greatly influenced housing development in the United States.

Community Planning and Development: This Office administers many of HUD’s major affordable housing and homelessness programs including the Community Development Block Grants (CDBG), the HOME program, Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room Occupancy program (Mod Rehab SRO), Shelter Plus Care, Emergency Shelter Grants (ESG), and Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA).

Policy Development and Research (PD&R): This HUD office is tasked with maintaining current information on market conditions, housing needs and existing programs, as well as with researching priority housing and community development issues via the HUD USER Clearinghouse.

Public and Indian Housing: This office administers the public housing program HOPE VI, the Housing Choice Voucher Program (formerly – yet more popularly – known as Section 8), Project-Based Vouchers,[21] and individual loan programs housing block grants[22] for Indian tribes, Native Hawaiians, and Alaskans.

There are significant clusters of housing-related Federal legislation in the 1930s and 1940s, in the 1960s, and again in the 1990s and early 2000s.

1934 – The National Housing Act establishes the Federal Housing Administration, which facilitates mortgage insurance on FHA-approved lender loans made by FHA-approved lenders.

Presidential Administration: Franklin D. Roosevelt (D).

1937 – The Housing Act of 1937 inaugurates the United States Housing Authority, which oversees slum-clearance projects and the construction of low-rent housing.

Presidential Administration: Franklin D. Roosevelt (D).

1938 – The National Housing Act Amendments of 1938 are enacted, creating the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA), which created a secondary market to the Federal Housing Administration.

Presidential Administration: Franklin D. Roosevelt (D).

1942 – President Franklin Delano Roosevelt established the National Housing Agency with Executive Order 9070, Establishing the National Housing Agency as well as a raft of other housing-related authorities and agencies as the US mobilized during World War II.

Presidential Administration: Franklin D. Roosevelt (D).

1949 – The Housing Act of 1949 is put in place to promote the eradication of slums and promote community development and redevelopment programs.

Presidential Administration: Harry S. Truman (D).

1959 – The Housing Act of 1959 sets in place funding for elderly housing.

1965 – The Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 established several major expansions in federal housing programs.

Presidential Administration: Lyndon B. Johnson (D).

1965 – The Department of Housing and Urban Development is established as a cabinet-level agency via the Department of Housing and Urban Development Act.

Presidential Administration: Lyndon B. Johnson (D).

1968 – The Fair Housing Act is passed to ban housing discrimination.

Presidential Administration: Lyndon B. Johnson (D).

1968 – The Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 establishes the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) with a mission of expanding affordable housing financing.

Presidential Administration: Lyndon B. Johnson (D).

1969 – Congress passes section 213 (a) of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1969 (Public Law 91-152), known as the Brooke Amendment which capped rent in public housing projects at no more than 25 percent of a tenant`s income.

Presidential Administration: Lyndon B. Johnson (D).

1974 – The Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 established community development block grants and support for urban homesteading.

Presidential Administration: Gerald Ford (R).

1977 – The Housing and Community Act of 1977 creates Urban Development Grants and continues elderly and handicapped assistance.

Presidential Administration: Jimmy Carter (D).

1987 – The Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act supported communities in dealing with homelessness and included the creation of the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness ( of which HUD is a member).

Presidential Administration: Ronald Reagan (R).

1988 – The Housing and Community Development Act allows for the sale of public housing to resident management corporations.

Presidential Administration: Ronald Reagan (R).

1992 – The HOPE VI program is created to revitalize public housing and how it works.

Presidential Administration: George Herbert Walker Bush (R).

1992 – The Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 includes mandates to HUD to set goals for lower income and underserved housing areas for the GSEs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Presidential Administration: George Herbert Walker Bush (R).

1995 – The "Blueprint for Reinvention of HUD" proposes sweeping changes in public housing reform and FHA and the consolidation of other programs into three block grants.

Presidential Administration: Bill Clinton (D).

1998 – HUD opens its Enforcement Center to take action against HUD-assisted multifamily property owners and other HUD fund recipients who violate laws and regulations. Congress also approves Public Housing reforms to reduce segregation by race and income, encourage and reward work, bring more working families into public housing, and increase the availability of subsidized housing for very poor families.

Presidential Administration: Bill Clinton (D).

2000 – America's homeownership rate achieves a new record-high of 67.7 percent in the third quarter of 2000. A total of 71.6 million American families own their habitations - more than at any time in American history.

Presidential Administration: Bill Clinton (D).

2007 – HUD initiates a program to provide seller concessions to buyers of HUD homes, allowing them to use a minimal down payment of $100.